67 research outputs found
Controlled enhancement of spin-current emission by three-magnon splitting
Spin currents—the flow of angular momentum without the simultaneous transfer of electrical charge—play an enabling role in the field of spintronics1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Unlike the charge current, the spin current is not a conservative quantity within the conduction carrier system. This is due to the presence of the spin–orbit interaction that couples the spin of the carriers to angular momentum in the lattice. This spin–lattice coupling9 acts also as the source of damping in magnetic materials, where the precessing magnetic moment experiences a torque towards its equilibrium orientation; the excess angular momentum in the magnetic subsystem flows into the lattice. Here we show that this flow can be reversed by the three-magnon splitting process and experimentally achieve the enhancement of the spin current emitted by the interacting spin waves. This mechanism triggers angular momentum transfer from the lattice to the magnetic subsystem and modifies the spin-current emission. The finding illustrates the importance of magnon–magnon interactions for developing spin-current based electronics
Spin Seebeck insulator
Thermoelectric generation is an essential function of future energy-saving
technologies. However, this generation has been an exclusive feature of
electric conductors, a situation which inflicts a heavy toll on its
application; a conduction electron often becomes a nuisance in thermal design
of devices. Here we report electric-voltage generation from heat flowing in an
insulator. We reveal that, despite the absence of conduction electrons, a
magnetic insulator LaY2Fe5O12 converts a heat flow into spin voltage. Attached
Pt films transform this spin voltage into electric voltage by the inverse spin
Hall effect. The experimental results require us to introduce thermally
activated interface spin exchange between LaY2Fe5O12 and Pt. Our findings
extend the range of potential materials for thermoelectric applications and
provide a crucial piece of information for understanding the physics of the
spin Seebeck effect.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures (including supplementary information
Bose-Einstein condensation of photons in an optical microcavity
Bose-Einstein condensation, the macroscopic ground state accumulation of
particles with integer spin (bosons) at low temperature and high density, has
been observed in several physical systems, including cold atomic gases and
solid state physics quasiparticles. However, the most omnipresent Bose gas,
blackbody radiation (radiation in thermal equilibrium with the cavity walls)
does not show this phase transition, because the chemical potential of photons
vanishes and, when the temperature is reduced, photons disappear in the cavity
walls. Theoretical works have considered photon number conserving
thermalization processes, a prerequisite for Bose-Einstein condensation, using
Compton scattering with a gas of thermal electrons, or using photon-photon
scattering in a nonlinear resonator configuration. In a recent experiment, we
have observed number conserving thermalization of a two-dimensional photon gas
in a dye-filled optical microcavity, acting as a 'white-wall' box for photons.
Here we report on the observation of a Bose-Einstein condensation of photons in
a dye-filled optical microcavity. The cavity mirrors provide both a confining
potential and a non-vanishing effective photon mass, making the system formally
equivalent to a two-dimensional gas of trapped, massive bosons. By multiple
scattering off the dye molecules, the photons thermalize to the temperature of
the dye solution (room temperature). Upon increasing the photon density we
observe the following signatures for a BEC of photons: Bose-Einstein
distributed photon energies with a massively populated ground state mode on top
of a broad thermal wing, the phase transition occurring both at the expected
value and exhibiting the predicted cavity geometry dependence, and the ground
state mode emerging even for a spatially displaced pump spot
Bose-Einstein Condensation in Magnetic Insulators
The elementary excitations in antiferromagnets are magnons, quasiparticles
with integer spin and Bose statistics. In an experiment their density is
controlled efficiently by an applied magnetic field and can be made finite to
cause the formation of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). Studies of magnon
condensation in a growing number of magnetic materials provide a unique window
into an exciting world of quantum phase transitions (QPT) and exotic quantum
states.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Ferromagnetic resonance linewidth reduction in Fe/Au multilayers using ion beams
In order to optimize their magnetic properties, Fe/Au multilayers were treated by pregrowth and postgrowth ion-beam bombardments. The ferromagnetic resonance linewidth was used as our main figure of merit. The pregrowth treatment of the MgO substrate using a 60 eV atomic oxygen beam resulted in a reduction of the inhomogeneous linewidth broadening in comparison with a sample grown on an untreated substrate. This homogeneity increase is linked to the removal of substrate carbon contamination by the chemically active oxygen. It correlates with the reduced interface roughness. The postgrowth sample irradiation using 30 keV He+ ions also reduces the inhomogeneous broadening in the linewidth. Fe and Au have a miscibility gap, but the demixing is kinetically quenched at room temperature. Ion collisions locally minimize the interface energy by providing the energy necessary for localized demixing, resulting in a smoothing effect. Combined, the pregrowth and the postgrowth irradiations lead to the lowest observed linewidth
Spin Hall-induced auto-oscillations in ultrathin YIG grown on Pt.
We experimentally study nanowire-shaped spin-Hall nano-oscillators based on nanometer-thick epitaxial films of Yttrium Iron Garnet grown on top of a layer of Pt. We show that, although these films are characterized by significantly larger magnetic damping in comparison with the films grown directly on Gadolinium Gallium Garnet, they allow one to achieve spin current-driven auto-oscillations at comparable current densities, which can be an indication of the better transparency of the interface to the spin current. These observations suggest a route for improvement of the flexibility of insulator-based spintronic devices and their compatibility with semiconductor technology
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Spin Hall-induced auto-oscillations in ultrathin YIG grown on Pt
We experimentally study nanowire-shaped spin-Hall nano-oscillators based on nanometer-thick epitaxial films of Yttrium Iron Garnet grown on top of a layer of Pt. We show that, although these films are characterized by significantly larger magnetic damping in comparison with the films grown directly on Gadolinium Gallium Garnet, they allow one to achieve spin current-driven auto-oscillations at comparable current densities, which can be an indication of the better transparency of the interface to the spin current. These observations suggest a route for improvement of the flexibility of insulator-based spintronic devices and their compatibility with semiconductor technology
Recommended from our members
Spin Hall-induced auto-oscillations in ultrathin YIG grown on Pt.
We experimentally study nanowire-shaped spin-Hall nano-oscillators based on nanometer-thick epitaxial films of Yttrium Iron Garnet grown on top of a layer of Pt. We show that, although these films are characterized by significantly larger magnetic damping in comparison with the films grown directly on Gadolinium Gallium Garnet, they allow one to achieve spin current-driven auto-oscillations at comparable current densities, which can be an indication of the better transparency of the interface to the spin current. These observations suggest a route for improvement of the flexibility of insulator-based spintronic devices and their compatibility with semiconductor technology
Lasing spaser
In 2003 Bergman and Stockman introduced the spaser, a quantum amplifier of surface plasmons by stimulated emission of radiation. Here we introduce a further development of the spaser concept. We show that by combining the metamaterial and spaser ideas one can create a narrow-diversion coherent source of electromagnetic radiation that is fuelled by plasmonic oscillations. We argue that a two-dimensional array of a certain class of plasmonic resonators supporting coherent current excitations with high quality factor can act as a planar source of spatially and temporally coherent radiation, which we term a 'lasing spaser.
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